16-09-2012, 08:52 PM
Vasilios Vazakas Wrote:Greg Burnham Wrote:Vasilios Vazakas Wrote:Greg are you sure that Unspeakable is un-knowable and un-nameable or most people know who they are
but are scared even to call them by name?
Anonymity with all of its concomitant connotations: unspeakable because it is unknowable, unspeakable because "it and they" have no name(s).
Absolute power derived from absolute impunity.
If the Unspeakable was the Sponsor of the JFK assassination and if i agree with you that it is unknowable, then i conclude that it is impossible and beyond our power to
identify the Sponsors of the crime and they will remain forever obscure, unless they decide sometime in the future to reveal the who and why of the assassination.
We will never the Mechanics in Dealey Plaza the location of the shooters and who they were as a result of 50 years cover up.
So we should limit ourselves identifying the Facilitators?
Essentially, I agree with the notion that accepting the reality that a lot is out of our control is much wiser than being deluded. However, that is not to say that failing to
recognize and identify the signature of "their" hand in various operations is desirable. It is not. Part of their operational plan is designed to send us off in search of things
that are impossible to know, such as the identities of the perpetrators, that nevertheless seem essential to regaining a sense of personal and collective liberty. Perhaps
it is of human nature, as well as American culture, that we feel an inherent need for justice where there have been crimes committed against We the People. Thus, we
play into "their" master plan by seeking to pursue the guilty parties at this late juncture. The trail is cold. But the machination that put it into motion is right before us each
and every turn of the way. Recognizing it by signature--despite its anonymity--and resisting it requires great courage, vigilance, diligence, and an absolute lust for freedom
that no bonds can hold.
GO_SECURE
monk
"It is difficult to abolish prejudice in those bereft of ideas. The more hatred is superficial, the more it runs deep."
James Hepburn -- Farewell America (1968)
monk
"It is difficult to abolish prejudice in those bereft of ideas. The more hatred is superficial, the more it runs deep."
James Hepburn -- Farewell America (1968)